Aung San Suu Kyi and Viktor Orban agree ‘continuously growing Muslim populations’ is one of greatest challenges
Myanmar leader condemns illegal immigration in discussion with Hungary PM on rare trip to Europe
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Your support makes all the difference.Aung San Suu Kyi, the leader of Myanmar, and Hungary’s far-right nationalist prime minister, Viktor Orban, both see immigration and “continuously growing Muslim populations” as one of the greatest challenges facing their countries.
As part of a rare trip to Europe, Ms Suu Kyi, who has been condemned for her handling of the Rohingya refugee crisis, met the Hungarian leader in Budapest on Wednesday.
“The two leaders highlighted that one of the greatest challenges at present for both countries and their respective regions – southeast Asia and Europe – is migration,” the Hungarian government said in a statement after the meeting.
“They noted that both regions have seen the emergence of the issue of coexistence with continuously growing Muslim populations.”
Mr Orban said Hungary was in favour of trade cooperation between Myanmar and the EU, but rejected “attempts at the export of democracy”.
He said the bureaucrats in Brussels and elsewhere in the west “seek to conflate unrelated issues such as economic cooperation and internal political questions”, according to the statement.
The far-right leader has repeatedly clashed with the EU over the issue of immigration after his government declared “a crisis situation due to mass immigration” in 2015.
Mr Orban has called for immigration to be controlled by national governments, not EU bureaucrats, and says he will resist any bloc-wide attempt to strip Hungary of its right to protect its borders.
His government was accused of using anti-migrant rhetoric that fuels “xenophobic attitudes, fear and hatred”, in a report by the Council of Europe’s commissioner for human rights.
After his meeting with Myanmar’s leader, Mr Orban said the Hungarian people have “great respect for Aung San Suu Kyi and all she has done for her country’s freedom and democratic transformation”.
Ms Suu Kyi was once lauded as a champion of democracy after being elected as civilian leader in 2015 following 15 years of house arrest for opposing Myanmar’s military dictatorship. But she has since fallen from grace on the world stage after failing to condemn the military’s violent crackdown on the Muslim Rohingya minority in 2017.
The massacre, which saw thousands of Rohingya raped and killed, was described by the UN as an act of genocide. Ms Suu Kyi’s government has since failed to take the steps necessary to guarantee the safe return of the million Rohingya now living in refugee camps in Bangladesh.
Ms Suu Kyi has undertaken the trip to central Europe with the aim of strengthening Myanmar’s economic ties in the region. Before Hungary, she visited the Czech Republic where she met with the prime minister Andrej Babis.
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